Digital transformations within the airline industry have provided access to an unprecedented amount of aircraft, airline, and military aviation operational data. Access to this data has opened up the potential for doing predictive maintenance – the capability to spot an emerging issue before it may impact scheduled operations.

Cancelled or delayed flights caused by late incoming and delayed crews have made international headlines over the past few years. To avoid having your airline thrust into the international spotlight for the wrong reasons, you might want to consider implementing a dynamic system designed to help airlines recover from disrupted crew rosters.

What do we mean by a smarter EFB? We envision a smart EFB as being able to depict aeronautical information based on flight context. With a Smart EFT, information is specific to the pilot’s airline, aircraft type, chart rendering preferences, geospatial position and even current weather conditions…all on a single, data-driven map.

You're probably thinking of Aviator, a product that was developed to provide pilots with a single point of access to many of the applications they use already and is designed to share information across these applications to save time, prevent errors and improve the efficiency of your operation.